The Pope has called on health care
professionals to give elderly sick people respect and support, and not to give
way to the temptation of euthanasia. Speaking to participants in a conference called
The Pastoral Care of Elderly Sick People promoted by the Pontifical
Council for Health Care Ministry, Pope Benedict said that euthanasia was one of
the more alarming symptoms of the culture of death. He also recalled the
teaching and example of John Paul II, his predecessor. [Zenit, 18 November] Dignitas,
the Swiss group which arranges assisted suicides, wants to extend its services
to Germany. Ludwig Minelli, the group's head, told the Landbote newspaper that he had a contact in Germany
who was prepared to risk prosecution to help seriously ill people to commit
suicide. Last year, 57% of Dignitas clients came from Germany.
[Reuters
Africa, 18 November]
The head of Amnesty International in the UK has supported the organisation's new policy on abortion. In an interview for the Guardian newspaper, Ms Kate Allen dismissed the opposition of the Catholic church as nonsensical, and revealed that only 222 out of a quarter of a million British members had resigned their membership, while 105 had increased their donations. [Guardian, 19 November] The Catholic bishops of England and Wales have written to all Catholic primary and secondary schools and sixth form colleges saying that they should no longer have ties with Amnesty and should not raise money for it. Catholics are urged to continue to work for justice by putting into practice the social teaching of the Catholic Church by supporting other organisations. [Times, 16 November]
Professor Ian Wilmut, who cloned Dolly the sheep, has announced that he will no longer pursue cloning to obtain human stem cells for therapies. He has decided that there is greater potential in a technique pioneered using mice by Shinya Yamanaka at Kyoto University, Japan, in which stem cells have been developed from fragments of skin. [Scotland on Sunday, 18 November]
A pro-life group in Colorado has gained approval from the state's supreme court to start collecting signatures for a ballot proposal for a constitutional amendment that would define a human embryo as a person from fertilisation. In approving the language of the proposal, the court over-ruled objections from the pro-abortion lobby. Colorado for Equal Rights has six months in which to collect 76,000 signatures. Similar campaigns are being run in five other states. [Guardian, 14 November]
Quintuplets born to a Russian woman in a British hospital are doing well. The babies were delivered at 26 weeks by caesarean section by Dr Lawrence Impey of the John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford. He was contacted by the mother's relatives after her doctor in Russia had advised selective abortion for some of the babies. All medical costs have been met by a group of Russian philanthropists. [Mirror, 15 November]
To subscribe to SPUC's email information services, please visit www.spuc.org.uk/em-signup. The reliability of the news herein is dependent on that of the cited sources, which are paraphrased rather than quoted. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the society. © Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, 2012